71'"HE MICHIGAN DAILY VEDNESDAY. JAN. 10. THELMICHIGAN D TT. VWYJElAVi YJil I k"'%. 1Vj LUU French Group Graduates Plan To Inaugurate Second Dance Lecture Series Affair Scheduled Saturday First Speech To Be Given In Rackham Building Tomorrow; Eight Talks The second in a proposed series of Are Scheduled By Club Graduate School dances will be held Saturday night, Jan. 13, from 9 p.m. Inaugurating the annual lecture to 12 p.m. in the Assembly Hall of series of the French'Club, Prof. Hugo the Rackham Building, Tom Dixon, Thieme, head of the romance lan- chairman of the Graduate School guages department, will speak on Social Committee, announced today. "French Civilization" at 4:15 tomor- Assisting Dixon on the committee are row in Room 103, Romance Languages Catherine Good and Dorothy Goebel. Building. Admission is by season tic- All graduate students and members kets, which cost 50 cents and may be of the faculty are invited to the dance obtained at the door. and may attend either stag or in Professor Thieme's lecture will deal couples, Dixon said. Admission will with French civilization in its entire- be 25 cents per person and refresh- ty, which he considers to be a battle ments will be included. of ideas. He will talk of the special The first dance, held j.st before contributions of France in the various Christmas vacation, was so outstand- epochs of her history, with emphasis ing a success, Dixon declared, that the on the cathedral, Versailles and the committee decided to continue the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, dances. One of the highlights of the series will .be a lecture by M. Louis Allard, former professor at Harvard Univer- A u d en Soared sity, and official lecturer of the French Alliance of America. The sub- To jetof his talk, which will be given Feb. 29, will be "The Father of French Melodrama: Guilbert de Pixerecourt." In N ine Years The annual play of Le Cercle Fran- cais, to be presented May 3 in the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre, will be In the nine years since the publi- the other main feature of the club's cation of his first book of verse, program for the year. "Poems," in 1930, W. H. Auden, who "Some Stars of the French Music will lecture in Rackham Auditorium Hall," will be the subject of the sec- i at 4:15 p.m. Friday, has risen to lead- ond lecture in the series, to be given ership of the most talked-of school by ,Mr. Clifford Prator, instructor in of England's present poets.- the French department, Jan. 17. "Les Together with Stephen Spender Hommes de Bonne Volonte," a moral and Cyril Day-Lewis, Auden has portrait of France, will be discussed formed a school of modern poetry by Prof. Antoine Jobin, March 6. that is exploring new ground in po- "The Romantic Life of Tancrede de etical technique. In content, the Rohan" will be the subject of a lecture poetry of the group is critical of mod- by Mr. Francis Gravit of the French ern society. Auden himself is adeptI department, March 13, while Mr. Ab- at satire. raham Herman will speak on "French In addition to "Poems," Auden's1 Political Parties" March 20. works include "The Orators," "The Next in the series will be a lecture Dance of Death," "Look Stranger!"r March 27 by Prof. Michael Pargment and his most famous production, "The on "Some Opinions of French Youth Dog Beneath the Skin," a poetic1 on America and France," while Prof. drama written in collaboration with Warner Patterson will deliver the last Christopher Isherwood. speech, entitled "Enfin Malherbe A graduate of Oxford, Auden wont Vint." England's most important poetry Tickets for the entire series may award, "The King's Medal," in 1937. be procured from the Secretary of He has lived in America since 1938F the romance languages department, or and is married to Erika Mann,' at the door at the time of the lecture, daughter of novelist Thomas Mann. for 50 cents. Holders of these tickets His talk here, "A Sense of One's are entitled to admision to all lectures, Age," will be sponsored by the Eng- a small additional charge being made lish department. for the annual play. Adams Chosen To Serve DETROIT, Jan. 9.-(IP)-The Lone d isChosenComS ee Ranger, dashing hero of the air- On Birthday Committee waves, had a new incentive today for Tom Adams, '40, president oftheI conuerngtheforesof vil aInterfraternity Council, has been daughter weighing six pounds and appointed to serve as representativer eight ounces. for fraternities and sororities on theI Washtenaw County Committee for the Celebration of the President's RADro and MICH IGAN Cabs Birthday, acting in behalf of the National Foundation for Infantile Phones Paralysis, Inc.P 3030 or 7000 Adams is the only student member 0 on the committee composed of fac-I ultymen and townspeople.o 1 i : Danced With Rhett Opera To Use Student Songs Melodies And Composers To Be Announced Soon Music had its inning in the Union Opera last night when the music committee met to consider student- wr'itten songs that might be used in the production. The committee will select only tunes which have been written by students. Announcement of the ac- ceptable melodies and their com- posers will be made within a few days. Rehearsals will continue from 7 tol 11 p.m. today at the Union. Director Roy Hoyer will rehearse the comedy and "pony" choruses and several di- alogue parts. Engineers To Hear Talk On Disease At Rackham A slide illustrated talk on "The Engineering Aspects of Occupational Diseases" will be given by Dr. J. J. Bloomfield, sanitary engineer of the United States Public Health. Service, in the Rackham Amphitheatre at 7:30 p.m. today. Student members of the ASME and the SAE are especially invited to at- tend. Dean To Attend Meeting Dean C. E. Griffin of the School of Business Administration will attend a nationwide conference of deans of1 schools of business administration to-1 day and tomorrow in Washington, D.C. .s,~ as,~,* S I1 t A% By JUNE McKEE Over WCAR - WMBC (network now!) "What's New?" flashes from "The Women's Page" at 2:45 p.m. today. Produced and directed by Margery Soenksen, Grad., this pro- gram presents Marguerite Mink, '41 discussing Kirsten Flagstad, Lucy Jones, Grad, covering clothes ques- tions, Helen Ralston, '40. describ- ing "stuff in shoppes," and Janet Burns, '41, relating recent social do- ings for "the palpitating public in Detroit and Pontiac," as producer Soenksen puts it. She will fill with five minutes of news. Anne Kleiner, '40, announces. In WJR's "Student Forum" at 3:30 p.m., Prof. James K. Pollock, of the political science department, brings before the mike some students select- ed from his classes to talk on "Party Organization and Machinery in Michigan." The discussion is in round table, extemporaneous form. Robert Parker, '40, will announce. Vieing with "Mr. Maurice Hall" and Prof. Waldo Rabbit" for some- what dubious honors in fan-card coinage, is this-"Mr. Walter Wab- bits," alliterative at least . . . From WJR, the Goodwill station, Ted Grace writes of a new sponsor now. Twice weekly he will announce for Bob Hall,1 PONTIAC, Mich., Jan. 9.-W')-The 1939 Michigan Apple Act Tax, cause of much farmer criticism, again was held unconstitutional today by a three-judge court which issued an in-7 junction restraining collection of the tax. Michigan Cities Hear Speeches By Professors Extension Service Directs State-Wide Schedule Of Faculty Lectures With the new year well on its way, the Extension Service is swinging 'in- to a week of intense activity with its state-wide system of faculty speeches. Prof. Valentine Windt, director of Play Production, is going east to Bir- mingham, Mich., to address at 2:30 p.m. the Birmingham Branch of the American Association of University Women on "A Review of the Broad- way Plays." Making a northern circuit, Prof. J. E. Maddy, professor of Radio Mu- sic Instruction, is conducting a series of microphone tests and conferences continuing through Friday in Tra- verse City, Manistee, Reed City and Clare. Dr. Charles A. Sink, president of the University's music school, goes to Ypsilanti at 3 p.m. today to com- ment on "The Musical Celebrities I Have Met" before the Ypsilanti Ladies Literature Club. El Paso Greets Tapping Student 'Perspectives' Material Due Today Perspectives editors were seen ear- nestly conferring with the professors of. English composition courses yes- terday. They were not polishing the apple; they were sleuthing for literary materialthat might be used in the magazine's pages. Today is the deadline for the sub- mission of manuscripts. Anyone on campus may contribute-be he engi- neer, forester or B.M.O.C. Manu- scripts may be left at the English or Engineering English offices or at the Publications Building. Departments to which students may contribute are: poetry, fiction (in- cluding short plays or radio skits), essay or book review. All material submitted will be read by one of these staffs and rejected manuscripts will receive a brief criticism. A receive a brief criticism. I One dance--the first-with Clark Gable at the Junior League "Gone With The Wind Ball" in Atlanta may cost Martha Scott Clayton of New York at least a month's con- finement to the campus of Wheat- on College at Norton, Mass. College authorities said she cut her last class before Christmas to get to Atlanta in time for the ball and the penalty will be at least four weeks "strict campusing." Dr. Peet To Speak To Biological Group Dr. Max M. Peet of the University Hospital will speak at 8 p.m. today in Rackham Assembly Room at the winter initiation meeting of Phi Sig- ma, honorary biological society. Karl F. Lagler, Grad., will also re- port on the Biennial Convention at which he acted as a local delegate. At this 'convention, affiliated with the American Association for the Ad- vancement of Science, Mr. Lagler de- livered a paper on "The Study of Fish Preedation, a Research Field of Great Opportunity." Dr. Barrett Will Speak At Health Meeting Today Renewing its series of weekly lec- tures to public health students, the Division of Hygiene and Public Health is presenting Dr. C. D. Barrett, di- rector of the, Ingham County Health Department, at 3 p.m. today in the West Amphitheatre of the West Medical Building. Dr. Barrett will consider "The Problem of Rural Health Adminis- tration." He will address the Public Health Assembly. The lecture is open to the public. if - - you want to keep up with the latest books get our RENTAL LIBRARY HABIT .. . * 3c a day " 10c minimum charge " no deposit FOLLETT'S 322 South State Dial 6363 T. Hawley Tapping, general secre- tary of the Alumni Association, held a meeting of the University of Mich- igan Club of El Paso yesterday. He will hold a similar meeting at Mem- phis later in the week and, before returning to Ann Arbor, will attend a regional meeting of national alumni directors. I i P - .1Dial16363 I Better Light hoosted STOPPIN6IIPOVER of this window 46%! A millinery shop made a test on the effectiveness of improved show window lighting. By using colored lighting for general illumination and white spotlights on the merchandise, the attracting power of the window was increased 46%. A simi- lar test in a shoe store produced even more startling results. By doubling the general illumination and using a spot- light in the center of the window, the attracting power was increased 81 % and the featured shoes were quickly sold out. * * * Perhaps better lighting can increase the effectiveness of YOUR windows. Detroit Edison engineers will gladly help you find out. They will make a lighting survey without charge and offer helpful suggestions where needed. Call your Detroit Edison office. The Detroit Edison Company. 'I I i I I I